A season in-Bloom(gren): The next step toward a winning football culture

Last September, I wrote a column in the Rice Thresher titled “Rice football must build a winning culture.” In the article, I pleaded for Rice to make two changes: 1) fire its then-head football coach David Bailiff, and 2) liven its mundane stadium atmosphere.

It took three months for the Owls to make the first change. On Dec. 6, 2017, Rice announced the hiring of former Stanford University Offensive Coordinator Mike Bloomgren, hoping to turn the chapter on its football program with a meager 4-20 record in its last two seasons under Bailiff.

The early returns of the coaching change have been positive: the spring off-season was competitive and disciplined, the first game of the season was a win and the Bayou Bucket was in Rice’s hands until the third quarter. Despite falling two touchdowns short in the Owls’ recent loss at Hawaii University, Bloomgren has demonstrated an ability to generate high-level athletic performance from a Division I football program at an elite academic school.

Sustaining long-term success from Rice’s new, competitive football culture will require one key ingredient: competitive recruiting. By targeting three-star athletes, scouting out-of-state talent and signing system-oriented players, Bloomgren can make Rice a top-three team in the Conference USA West Division for a decade.

Why is recruiting so important? Recruiting allows a team to replenish weak spots on the roster, groom quarterbacks for the future and sign impact players on offense, defense and special teams. Furthermore, recruiting is empirically correlated to winning. Florida Atlantic University, which finished a perfect 8-0 in C-USA last season, had the No. 1 recruiting class in C-USA the previous offseason, according to 247Sports. On the flip side, last year’s bottom feeders, Rice and University of Texas, El Paso, finished second-to-last and last in recruiting in 2017, respectively. Need more evidence? Four of the five lowest ranked teams in C-USA last season also finished in C-USA’s bottom five in recruiting in 2017.

Fans who disliked Bailiff should look no further for the culprit of Rice’s one-win season a year ago: Bailiff’s last two recruiting classes were ranked 129th and 122nd nationally. He recruited only five three-star prospects in 2016 and 2017, combined. Thankfully, the Owls’ new head coach has proven himself to be a more strategic recruiter than his predecessor.

Enjoy what you're reading?Signup for our newsletter

Email Address *

According to 247Sports, in 2018, Bloomgren’s first official recruiting class, Rice signed nine three-star athletes. ESPN’s recruiting measure gave Rice six three-star athletes by comparison — still one more than the last two years combined. Maybe the best of the bunch is inside linebacker Blaze Alldredge, who was ranked by 247Sports as the 163rd best recruit in the 2018 class. Alldredge signed with the Owls in May, five months after Bloomgren was ushered in; in fact, eight of the nine three-star recruits in Rice’s 2018 class were signed after Bloomgren took over.

There is still need for growth to stay competitive in C-USA. In the 2019 recruiting season, the other 13 conference teams have already signed 85 three-star athletes combined. Rice’s 2019 recruiting class includes six three-star athletes, one shy of the conference average. North Texas is ascending on the recruiting trail, having already signed 19 three-star athletes for 2019. In response, Bloomgren should aim to sign two three-star athletes each month.

More from The Rice Thresher

Rice dropped a place in the recently released 2020 U.S. News & World Report National Universities rankings, tying with Cornell University at No. 17. Last year, Rice was tied with Cornell at No. 16 and the previous year Rice was in a four-way tie for No. 14.

Construction of a new five-story Hanszen College dormitory made out of mass timber will begin in 2021, according to Mark Ditman, the associate vice president of Housing and Dining, and Anzie Gilmore, the assistant director for project management and engineering.

Brian Lee, first-year head coach of Rice soccer, grew up in Scotland. According to Lee, growing up in a country widely known for its youth and professional soccer leagues led to his indoctrination in the sport.

Comments

Please note All comments are eligible for publication by The Rice Thresher.